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  • PACE As Lever Of Western Pressure On Yerevan Joining EaEU

    PACE AS LEVER OF WESTERN PRESSURE ON YEREVAN JOINING EAEU

    Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
    June 19 2014

    19 June 2014 - 12:08pm

    Susanna Petrosyan, Yerevan. Exclusively to Vestnik Kavkaza

    On June 17-18th co-reporters of the PACE Monitoring Commission
    on Armenia, Acsel Fisher and Alan Mill, visited Armenia. The last
    time they visited Armenia was in January 2012. Meanwhile, Armenia
    is still being monitored, as a country which hasn't fulfilled all
    the recommendations of the Council of Europe. In this context, the
    co-reporters should visit Armenia every two years at least, but they
    haven't appeared for 2.5 years.

    What is the reason for the unexpected visit?

    The PACE Monitoring Commission is an important political lever
    of pressure of the West on the vulnerable administration of Serge
    Sargsyan, which came to power on the rebound of the events of March
    1st 2008. The topic of March 1st is touched on in all PACE resolutions
    on Armenia adopted in the last six years.

    At the same time, the co-reporters' behaviour was aimed at protecting
    Serge Sargsyan's administration, the government, and the parliamentary
    majority. It caused dissatisfaction of the opposition, civil society
    and relatives of the people who perished on March 1st. They are
    indignant about the fact that the 1837 resolution of PACE on October
    5th 2011 states that "the page of the events of March 1st is closed."

    Some experts believe that the PACE promoted the positions of the West,
    which is interested in Sargsyan's administration being in power in
    Armenia, despite their statements on support of democratic processes.

    The Armenian authorities realized that the Council of Europe wouldn't
    investigate the events of March 1st 2008 in detail and blocked all
    attempts by the opposition to establish a parliamentary commission
    to investigate the developments.

    In December 2012 the parliamentary majority offered the opposition
    a compromise: in order to avoid politicization of the matter ahead
    of the presidential elections the discussion should be postponed to
    the postelection period. The speaker of the parliament, the current
    premier Ovik Abramyan, gave public guarantees that the question on
    establishing a commission on the events of March 1st would have been
    included on the agenda right after the elections and the Republican
    Party of Armenia would have voted for the draft. However, in spring
    2013 the parliamentary majority rejected the opposition's draft on
    the commission.

    In February 2014 the Armenian National Congress tried to revive
    discussion in parliament on establishing the commission. That time
    the authorities blocked the initiative by the opposition once again.

    "Such behaviour by the authorities confirms that a series of crimes
    leads to the top authorities of the country; it explains the policy
    of hiding information about the events of March 1st," the head of
    the ANC Levon Zurabyan thinks.

    Representatives of the opposition in the PACE tried to achieve a
    second analysis of the events on March 1st, but due to efforts of
    various PACE officials these initiatives were blocked.

    It turns out that the PACE Monitoring Commission has never taken
    any steps against the Armenian government. During the current visit,
    the co-reporters stated for the first time that those guilty of the
    deaths of 10 innocent people hadn't been found, even though so many
    years had passed.

    It seems PACE's shift from hushing-up the tragedy to such a strict
    position is connected with the inconsistent foreign policy of official
    Yerevan. The West is dissatisfied with Sargsyan's decision to join the
    Eurasian Economic Union. PACE is still one of the levers of pressure
    on the Armenian government by the West. We can't rule out that a new
    resolution on Armenia, which will be developed by PACE in summer,
    will be unpleasant for the Yerevan authorities.

    http://vestnikkavkaza.net/analysis/politics/56623.html

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